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Shampoo

  • 1975
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
15 k
MA NOTE
Shampoo (1975)
Official Trailer
Lire trailer2:11
2 Videos
83 photos
SatireComédieDrame

Le jour des élections, 1968. Un coiffeur, et homme à femmes, est trop occupé à couper des cheveux et à gérer ses différentes copines ainsi que sa maîtresse, dont il rencontre le mari et déco... Tout lireLe jour des élections, 1968. Un coiffeur, et homme à femmes, est trop occupé à couper des cheveux et à gérer ses différentes copines ainsi que sa maîtresse, dont il rencontre le mari et découvre qu'il a une liaison avec son ex-petite amie.Le jour des élections, 1968. Un coiffeur, et homme à femmes, est trop occupé à couper des cheveux et à gérer ses différentes copines ainsi que sa maîtresse, dont il rencontre le mari et découvre qu'il a une liaison avec son ex-petite amie.

  • Réalisation
    • Hal Ashby
  • Scénario
    • Robert Towne
    • Warren Beatty
  • Casting principal
    • Warren Beatty
    • Julie Christie
    • Goldie Hawn
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    15 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Hal Ashby
    • Scénario
      • Robert Towne
      • Warren Beatty
    • Casting principal
      • Warren Beatty
      • Julie Christie
      • Goldie Hawn
    • 143avis d'utilisateurs
    • 68avis des critiques
    • 65Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 1 Oscar
      • 3 victoires et 11 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Shampoo
    Trailer 2:11
    Shampoo
    Shampoo: I'm Embarrassed
    Clip 1:21
    Shampoo: I'm Embarrassed
    Shampoo: I'm Embarrassed
    Clip 1:21
    Shampoo: I'm Embarrassed

    Photos83

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    Rôles principaux75

    Modifier
    Warren Beatty
    Warren Beatty
    • George
    Julie Christie
    Julie Christie
    • Jackie
    Goldie Hawn
    Goldie Hawn
    • Jill
    Lee Grant
    Lee Grant
    • Felicia
    Jack Warden
    Jack Warden
    • Lester
    Tony Bill
    Tony Bill
    • Johnny Pope
    George Furth
    George Furth
    • Mr. Pettis
    Jay Robinson
    Jay Robinson
    • Norman
    Ann Weldon
    • Mary
    Luana Anders
    Luana Anders
    • Devra
    Randy Scheer
    • Dennis
    Susanna Moore
    • Gloria
    Carrie Fisher
    Carrie Fisher
    • Lorna
    Mike Olton
    • Ricci
    Richard E. Kalk
    • Detective Younger
    Ronald Dunas
    • Nate
    Hal Buckley
    • Kenneth
    Jack Bernardi
    • Izzy
    • Réalisation
      • Hal Ashby
    • Scénario
      • Robert Towne
      • Warren Beatty
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs143

    6,415.2K
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    Avis à la une

    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    The film portrays its women, perhaps in a questionable way, accompanied by awareness of their way of life

    A day in the life of a Southern California hairstylist (Beatty) as he beds three women (Christie, Hawn and Lee Grant) while at the same time trying to seek a loan from businessman Lester (Oscar nominee Jack Warden) to help him open his own salon… His world soon starts to fall apart as he realizes what he fervently wishes in life and the limitations of his cheerful posture toward others…

    Lee Grant won an Oscar for playing Lester's bored wife who can't seem to take her eyes off Beatty, and even her nymphet daughter (a young Carrie Fisher) desperately wanted him to be engaging in reciprocal sex… Grant's actually quite jovial and adorable in her role as we heartily feel for her character near the climax…

    Warren Beatty appears either excitable or distracted through most of the story… He lies, hides, and denies facts, doing whatever it takes to make everyone happy...

    If you like to see Julie Christie notoriously fellating Beatty underneath an elegant dinner table… well don't miss this funny sex comedy which received four Oscar nominations
    casper-12

    The Country Wife

    Beatty says he approached Towne to do a modern version of the classic restoration comedy called The Country Wife (hilarious by the way). In the original play, the hero beds all the wives by confessing to their husbands that he's impotent so the husbands make fun of him and think nothing of leaving their frustrated and underappreciated wives in his care.

    Here in the updated "Shampoo", Beatty and Towne make the hero an assumed-to-be-gay hairdresser (instead of impotent)and the results are inspired bedroom farce mixed with social satire.

    Younger viewers may find the film a little dated but it was a "period" film when it was made (set in 68 when it was shot in 74) so Ashby consciously gave it that dated look. For me this and Heaven Can Wait are Beatty's best work. Walks a fine comic/tragic line. And this really feels like the closest character to Beatty's heart. It was after this that I went back and saw Splendor in the Grass and began to appreciate Beatty as an actor rather than just a gigolo celebrity.

    Great dialogue by Towne, Jack Warden's hilarious and Julie Christie is stunning.
    Chrysanthepop

    The Hairdresser Undresses The Customer

    'Shampoo' is quite an interesting period black comedy set in the late 60s during the sex revolution. In one sentence, it's about a Casanova hairdresser who sleeps around with every woman he meets but there is one whom he loves and she happens to be the mistress of a not-to-mess-with businessman. Ashby does a splendid job in bringing out the 60's look but it is Towne and Beatty who bring the feel especially through the dialogues and use of language. Not to mention, the make-up department that does an equally fine job. The humour is somewhat different from other films and traditional viewers may find the jokes somewhat vulgar but that doesn't bother me as long as they manage to draw chuckles and at least make me smile. The actors, that include a vivacious supercute Goldie Hawn, a sizzling Julie Christie, a hilarious Jack Warden, a fiery Lee Grant and a very young Carrie Fisher. But, it is Warren Beaty's film. He demonstrates George's wildness, passion, vulnerability and despair with effective skill. In my humble opinion it is one of his best works, both as actor and writer. I don't understand why people call it outdated. It is set in an older time and if the humour still works, why is it obsolete? I got the movie randomly and now I'm glad that I picked this one.
    7StevePulaski

    Again, what I do in the bedroom is all of your business

    Set on the eve of the presidential election that put Richard Nixon in the oval office, Shampoo revolves around George Roundy (Warren Beatty), a successful, Beverly Hills-based hairdresser, who has ostensibly skated by in life solely on his good looks, charisma, and easygoing charm with women. Despite living and committing to his girlfriend Jill (Goldie Hawn), George still seeks sex from many other women, often his regular clients.

    One thing George has consistently wanted to do is open his own hair salon; one day, he turns to Lester and Felicia (Jack Warden and Lee Grant), a wealthy, local-area couple. However, another problem emerges for George and that is the fact that Lester's current mistress (Julie Christie) is one of George's former girlfriends. Lester just outright assumes George, because of his appearance and choice of occupation, is gay, and doesn't see him as any legitimate sexual threat. It isn't until George becomes closer to Lester, meeting his wife, rekindling things with Lester's mistress, and even becoming entranced with select other women that George succumbs to furthering his pedigree as a sexual deviant.

    Shampoo subtly evokes the breakdown of the limiting and often sexually regressive sexual politics and standards of the 1960's; it plays similar instruments as Paul Mazursky's brilliant and underrated Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice where the very nature of its plot is subversive because it takes a sensitive, introspective camera into characters' bedrooms rather than simply closing the door on it. It's a period of time in American cinema that I cheekily bill "what I do in the bedroom is all of your business," due to the liberal mindset and furtherance of sexual freedom, orientation, and behavior in public. In the contemporary, sex is still a social taboo in America, but with each year, be it what is accepted by the MPAA, or what is casually discussed by young people in a serious, social setting, the stigma of sex is continuing to be broken in many ways.

    Shampoo looks at the social mores by picking a character who is contemptible not because he loves his sex but because of how dishonest he chooses to be. There's nothing wrong with having multiple sexual partners, nor is there nothing inherently wrong with practicing polygamy or sleeping around. There is something wrong, however, with being dishonest or deceptive about it, which is what George consistently is. With that, screenwriters Robert Towne and Beatty seem to recognize this, and Beatty himself seems to recognize it as he's playing the character. Nonetheless, he challenges you to like him largely by the quick-witted and zippy way he moves and conducts himself, as well as the way he works and entertains his clients. He may not be an easy character to like, but he's not an easy character to write off.

    With that, Beatty gives an entertaining performance and effective turns an ensemble film into what could easily be mistaken as a one-man show, if it wasn't for the significant presences of Goldie Hawn and Lee Grant, specifically Grant who winds up having some strong scenes with Beatty during more pivotal moments of the film. These inclusions make Shampoo more likable throughout all the contemptible attributes of the film, and the film winds up addressing sexual politics in a way that doesn't tell the audience, but show them. It sort of walks in circles, not always coming to a clear point, but Beatty's performance and its more subtler approach to the material is enough to make it, if nothing else, a thematically and fundamentally interesting piece for the time.

    Starring: Warren Beatty, Goldie Hawn, Julie Christie, Jack Warden, and Lee Grant. Directed by: Hal Ashby.
    tieman64

    The original Zohan

    Hal Ashby's "Shampoo" stars Warren Beatty as George Roundy, a popular Beverly Hills hairdresser who spends his life juggling customers, jobs and women.

    The great joke of the film is that George exists solely to please other people. He's entirely selfless. Whilst Ashby paints the rest of society as being self-centered and selfish, George dutifully cuts hair, tends to women and bounces from one lover to another. The poster boy for altruism, he exists solely to make other people happy.

    Though marketed as a sex comedy, the film works better as a political statement. It takes place during the eve of the 1968 presidential election (in which Nixon was elected) and attempts to capture the last vestiges of a certain crazy, carefree era, Ashby contrasting whimsical Pre-Nixon attitudes (nonchalant sex, free love, a kind of social cohesion which George can no longer maintain), with the knowledge that Watergate, corruption, lies and the general pessimism of the Nixon era, were all on the horizon. By the film's end, George can no longer love everybody. The glue has failed and myopia, separation, selfishness and egotism on a grand scale has begun.

    Unsurprisingly, everyone in "Shampoo" aspires to success in both bed and bank. The characters are constantly working. Working at their jobs, on themselves, or on their lovers etc. But Ashby's larger point is that they ultimately have no significant political or cultural impact. They're too selfish, myopic and self centred, and thus the Nixon administration, which comes about at the end of the film, is exactly what these people deserved.

    "Shampoo's" opening and closing scenes neatly portray George's own personal evolution. The film opens with him making love to one of his many women, the Beach Boys' lyrics, "Wouldn't it be nice if we were married..." pulsating on the soundtrack. The song emphasises the yearning beneath George's playboy image. By the end of the film, however, George is left alone on a hill top, watching as his women turn their backs on him and drive away with their respective partners. They've all moved on, whilst he stands there, a dead man with a pipe dream. Hard luck, man.

    7.9/10 - Worth one viewing. Adam Sandler's "Don't Mess With The Zohan" would borrow heavily from Warren Beatty's work here.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Lovers off and on since 1967, Warren Beatty and Julie Christie broke up for good during the making of this movie. They remained friends and later worked together in Le ciel peut attendre (1978).
    • Gaffes
      The Coca-Cola can George drinks from while chatting with Lorna is a post-1968 design.
    • Citations

      George Roundy: Can't we just, eh, be friends?

      Lorna: Okay.

      [teen-aged Lorna makes George an offer he can't refuse]

      Lorna: You wanna fuck?

    • Crédits fous
      In the opening credits, horror film producer/actor William Castle is billed as "Bill Castle," but in the end credits he is back to "William Castle."
    • Connexions
      Featured in Precious Images (1986)
    • Bandes originales
      Wouldn't It Be Nice
      (1966) (uncredited)

      Music by Brian Wilson

      Lyrics by Tony Asher, Mike Love and Brian Wilson

      Performed by The Beach Boys

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Shampoo?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 12 novembre 1975 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Shampooing
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 2270 Bowmont Drive, Beverly Hills, Californie, États-Unis(Jackie's House at Bowmont & Hazen)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Persky-Bright / Vista
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Rubeeker Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 4 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 49 407 734 $US
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 49 407 734 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 50min(110 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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